The Weather Snow or rain in south and snow in north portions today; tomorrow snow and colder. C, r ita ~Iat Editorials What It Is And What It Does.. Action Towards Judicial Reform ... VOL. XLV. No. 82 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 1935 iP PRICE FIVE CENTS Alpha Nu Will Hear Brucker, Former Governor Of State To Speak At 6:30 P.M. WednesdayAt Union Siosson Scores Woodward's Plan To Expel "Student Reds' By BERNARD WEISSMAN degree of tolerance is given to those Declaring that the adoption of Rear who find out and teach (what seems Admiral Clark H. Woodward's pro- to us) untruth. posal to summarily expel "college "No doubt Rear Admiral Clark reds" would make universities "timid Woodward is convinced that 'opposi- convents of mental copycats," Prof. tion to national preparedness in every Preston W. Slosson of the history de- form' is a dangerous error. So is Mus- partment yesterday took vigorous is- solini sincerely convinced that any-a sue with Woodward's attack Friday thing which is not Fascist is error, and on radical activities at colleges having Stalin that everything not communis- RO.T.C. units. tic is error. For the matter of that Professor Slosson compared Wood- Torquemada thought that anything, ward's attitude with Mussolini's at- not Roman Catholic was error.I titude toward Fascism, Stalin's to- "Why not suppress error? For sev- ward Communism, and Torquemada's eral reasons, but the chief one is that i i President To Act On Utility Field Issue' Second Step To Be TakenI By Roosevelt In Project Of National Regulation HauptmannIs To Appear In OwnzDefense Attorney Reilly Says He Will Ask Defendant Only Seven Questions acific Flight Completed Safely By Noted Aviatrix *1 Is Spans Pacific Trade Commission Cross-Examination Report Announced May Be Lengthy Is An Alumnus Of Forensic Society Will Speak On 'Something Or Other;' Is Topic He Used When 'M' Student Former-governor Wilber M. Bruck- er will address the initiation banquet of Alpha Nu, honorary speech frat- ernity, at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Union, it was announced last night. Nearly 30 persons are expected to hear the Michigan statesman. The national president of Kappa Phi Sig- ma, of which Alpha Nu is a member, Lyle Eiserman, '28, may attend the banquet, officials said. Just 20 years ago when Governor Brucker was still in the University, he spoke at an Alpha Nu banquet on the topic, "Something Or Other." When Toastmaster Arthur Marlowe, '36, introduces him, he will give him that subject to speak on again. William Groening, '36L, will give the toast to the pledges, and the re- sponse will be made by Ralph Dan- hos, '36., The initiation proper will take place at 4 p.m. Wednesday after- noon, Carl Nelson, '37, president, stated. All Alpha Nu alumni on the campus are invited to the banquet, he said. A Michigan graduate in the class of '16L, and an. Alpha Nu alumnus, Governor Brucker has had a brilliant career in Michigan politics. An al- most unknown lawyer, he was ap- pointed assistant prosecuting attorney of Saginaw county. He was reelected and was then named as assistant at- torney-general. When Attorney- General William Potter was made a supreme court justice by Governor Fred W. Green, in February, 1929, Brucker was named to replace him. After serving two terms in that office, he was elected governor in 1930. He was defeated in the Repulican land- slide of 1932. Northwestern Names Waldorf As New Coach Former Kansas State Man Chosen For Post Vacated By Dick Hanley EVANSTON, Ill., Jan. 12. - () - Northwestern's search for a new head football coach ended today with the selection of Lynn O. Waldorf of Kan- sas StateCollege. Waldorf's selection was announced tonight by Kenneth L. Wilson, North- western's athletic director, after a day of rapid fire action on the task* of naming a successor to Richard E. "Dick" Hanley, who resigned several weeks ago. At the same time, Wilson said that Burt Ingwerson, former University of Iowa head coach and until recently an assistant at Louisiana State Uni- versity, would become Waldorf's first assistant. The new Northwestern coach was a star tackle of Syracuse University's powerful 122, '23, and '24 teams. coached by John F. "Chick" Meehan. He was named twice on the late Walter Camp's second All-American teams. He is the son of Bishop Ernest Lynn Waldorf, of the Chicago Methodist Episcopal area, who also is a member of the Northwestern University Board of Trustees. 488 Britishers Insure Life Of Shirley Temple HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 12. - (P) - Seventeen lords and earls are among 488 prominent Britishers who have insured six-year-old Shirley Temple against accident. The little film star has received her $25,000 policy from an English company with whom her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George F. Temple, insured her because no company .in this coun- try will write a policy for any con- siderable sum on a child. In case Shirley should meet a vio- sanrla th t 4RR nrlvinaa mrl,_ Mrs. Amelia Putnam Lands At Oakland, Calif., After 18 Hours In Air Is First To Make Hawaiian Trip Solo toward Roman Catholicism. He as- serted that "stopping freedom of thought ends in stopping thought." He illustrated this point by charac- terizing present-day Russia, Italy and Germany as "intellectually sterile." Man's most important accomplish- ments, he went on, have been made along with the teaching and free dis- cussion of so-called "dangerous doc- trines." "A university is a place to find out and teach the truth," Professor Slos- son declared. "By an interesting par- adox that is only possible if a great Miehioan S i x Whips Badger Puckmen, 2.-1 Wolverines Come From Behind With Berryman Scoring Both Goals By KENNETH PARKER Dick Berryman, sophomore right wing, who went thirsting for goals in Friday's high scoring hockey game with Wisconsin, presented the Mich- igan cause with two much-needed counters last night at the Coliseum to pull the Wolverines from behind into a 2 to 1 victory and a clean sweep of the two-game series with the Badg- ers. Berryman's scores came in the sec- ond and third periods after Wiscon- sin had slipped in a goal in the first stanza. Wisconsin On Defense The Wisconsin sextet, seeming to' concede the game to Michigan from the outset, played a defensive game throughout, but showed at times more competitive fire than was exhibited in Friday's contest. Johnny Sherf, unable to break through a five-man defensive wall, was also boxed up handily by Fallon, Badger right wing, and failed to getf a score for the first time in any game this season. Midway in the first period, Fallon managed to slip through the Michigan defensive, while Vic Heyliger was sprawled out as a result of a stunning body check, to score from close in. Johnny Jewell, who had another peaceful evening with only 10 saves did a leg split, but the puck slid under1 him before he could get down. Heyer Has 39 Saves Trying to preserve a one-goal lead, Wisconsin played a strictly defensive style of game for the remainder of the period. Heyer,tBadgergoalie was in good form, turning back 15 shots in this period. He had 39 saves for the entire game. The second period found Michigan carrying the contest into Badger ter- ritory continually, with Vic Heyliger the spearhead of the Wolverine at-1 tack. After nearly five minutes were gone, Heyliger's shot from just in- side the red line bounded off Chuck Heyer's pads to Berryman who batted the loose puck into the net, tying the score. The" final score of the game was made in the final period, when Walt Courtis got hold of the puck in a (Continued on Page 3) Michigan Loses To Minnesota' Quintet, 31-24 MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 12.- (A) 'Minnesota opened its Big Ten bas- ketball season as a dark horse to- night by trotting to a 31-24 victory ever Michigan in a rough engagement before 7,200 fans. Lanky Gordon Norman, Minnesota veteran center, dueling first with Matt Patanelli, then with the huge John Cee, led the Gopher offensive with four field goals and as many free hrows. A battle of centers to begin with, Norman caged four baskets in the first half while Patanelli was sinking three. The Wolverines playing aggres- ;ivaio frepdaMrinnea: to ighiet for a whenever the experiment is tried, stopping freedom of thought ends in Disclosure Of Abuses Of New York Post Reports stopping thought. Russia, Italy and Holding Companies Is Surprise Witness Ready Germany are today intellectually ster- ile. The chief work of mankind has Made At Investigation To Testify At Trial been carried on in those few and rare- places where 'dangerous doctrines' WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 - Armed (copyright, by Associated Press. 1935)1 could be peaceably taught and con- with a report from the Federal Trade FLEMINGTON, N. J., Jan. 12.- ( ) futed only by discussion and not by Commission which discloses the - Bruno Richard Hauptmann's wit- suppression., abuses of holding companies in the ness stand fight against the electric "If the universities were to adopt utility field, and with a report from chair, his lawyer announced tonight,! the policy of the Rear Admiral it the Federal Power Commission which will consist of answers to seven ques-r would end in their 'blowing out their refutes the claim that insurance com- tions, and six of the answers will be brains' and becoming timid convents panies own a substantial amount of "no."? of mental copycats." the stock utilities, President Roose- Hauptmann's wife, Anna, will fol- velt is prepared to take the second low her husband on the stand, and thei step in the program to regulate all defense expects the state to accord Students Complete utilities. her "the same consideration the de- 7 f fense has shown Mrs. Lindbergh. ExirmltsTh n The initial step was taken when the motherofsthe baby for whose murder Experiments, National Resources Board recom- Hauptmann is now on trial." Eat Their ResultsS mended extension of the Federal Gov- aid Edward J. Reilly. Haupt- ernment's activities in development mann's chief counsel tonight: of electric power facilities. The sec- "I think we shall ask Hauptmann Food for thought." ond step will be put up to Congress only seven questions. The questions That oft-quoted figure of speech, when the President requests the en- and their expected answers are: is being made very real and literal actment of legislation to provide for; "1. Did you kidnap the Lindbergh in the physics department these days. regulation of gas, electric, telephone baby? Answer no. Prof. Arthur W. Smith is giving his' and oil companies. 2. Were you in Hopewell, N. J. students in electrical measurements Took Control In 1922 the night of the kidnaping? Answer marshmallows to eat - and toasted The report of the Trade Commis- no. at that, only they have to toast their i sion, made public today, reveals that Will Deny Ransom Note own, holding companies began to take con- "3. Did you make the ladder (which, The whole thing is for scientific trol of the utility operating compan- the state contends was used in gain- purposes, however, the marshmal- ies in 1922 and continued their cam- ing admission to the Lindbergh nurs- lows being toasted to measure the( paign through 1932. ery ? Answer no. electricity used in the operation. But In some instances, the report says, "4. Did you go up that ladder to the students enjoy them anyway. these holding companies, supported kidnap the Lindbergh baby? Answer The results of these culinary experi- by investment bankers of New York, no. ments show that it costs exactly one paid more than a hundred times "5. Were you in New Jersey the sixtieth of a cent to toast a marsh-I mallow, And the marshmallows -- the value of the properties purchased, night of the kidnaping? Answer no. well they just seem to be there every and consumers are supporting these "6. Did you write the ransom note? class period, and it is strongly sus-companies at the inflated values. In Answer no. pedProfessor Sndith bys they us- one case, the commission's account- "7. Where did you get the money petted Professor Smith buys them out ants found that a holding company that was found in your garage? An- of his own pocket. bid $472.03 per share to gain control swer, from Isador Fisch." No cases of indigestion were re-i of an operating company which had Although Hauptmann's direct ex- electrdica mesumes. ha book value of only $2.97 per share. ammation, as outlined by his counsel, etricalmeasurements. Have No Conrol might require hardly more than a .e.rminute, the cross examination by the Rates charged to meet dividends state is expected to take longer. By Plebisite T T to holding companies cannot well be limiting the direct questioning, how- regulated, because local authorities ever, the defense will restrict the Decide ar's have no control over the holding state's cross-examination. companies, the Commission found. -Associated Press Photo. AMELIA EARHART PUTNAM Fraternity Menw Will Consider Finance Report Robert Briggs To Discuss Condition Of Houses At MeetingTuesday A meeting of all fraternity treas- urers will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tues- day, at the Union, according to Dean of Students Joseph A. Bursley. At this meeting Robert P. Briggs of the economics department will dis- Future Today Issue Of World War To Be Settled 15 Years And, 3 Days After Treatyi SAARBRUECKEN, Jan. 12 -(R')- A ding-dong rough and tough tumble campaign in which Adolf Hitler and his Nazi regime were in the main is- sue, at an end, the Saar today will choose its future national allegiance. The plebiscite, the last of 12 is- suing from the World War, will be held exactly 15 years and three days after the Treatyof Versailles went into effect. Experts call it by far the most im- portant consultation of public opin- ion resulting from the late Woodrow Wilson's famous doctrine that all people have the right to decide as to the rule under which they wish to live. Through Wilson, it was recalled, the United States is responsible for giving the 790,000 residents of this rich industrial region their opportun- ity to choose among continuance of League of Nations government, re- union with Germany or union with France. Of those three issues, the Saar's 543,323 qualified voters - qualified because they lived in the Saar the day the Versailles Treaty was signed - today will express their prompt, composite opinion, while every de- tachment of international and Saar police and gendarmes stand guard, and the 3,500 troops of the League's first national army watch. Wilfred Shaw Leaves For Executives' Meeting Wilfred B. Shaw, director of alumni relations, left today for a meeting of college, university and alumni execu- tives to be held Jan. 14 at Vassar College. He is expected to return to Ann Arbor Thursday. The meeting was called by the American Association of Adult Edu- cation to consider a report on Adult Education prepared by Ralph A. Beals of New York. The report is a con- tinuation and supplement to a report on an investigation in the same field "Holding companies that own and operate no properties are not classed as public utilities and, therefore, are not subject to regulation restricting competition among operating com- panies."'the report continues. The Commission says that the field is virtually "wide open" for holding companies to gain control of operat- ing companies and thus remove them from regulation within the state or community. Police Disperse Communists In Paris Skirmish Hunger Marchers Demand Immediate Program To End Unemployment Paris, Jan. 12. -(P) - Twelve hun- dred Communist hunger marchers converging upon Paris with cries for overcoats and an increased dole were defeated in a clash with police today in a snowstorm. The Communists were dispersed by a wall of steel-helmeted guards near the city gates. A column of demon- strators from the west broke ranks and trickled into the city in groups to attend three mass meetings this after- noon. Police barred the way of smaller columns from other directions. The demonstrators engaged in a general scuffle with the gendarmes, but found themselves no match for their well- fed opponents. The Communists said they would make another attempt to enter the city later today after they had been, reinforced by additional marchers. from the neighborng department of Sein-et-Oise. The marchers began to converge upon the city yesterday. They experi- enced considerable hardship from bit- terly cold weather. Official figures showthath436,442 persons ai'e on the dole. The Com- munists and French Federation of Labor, however, assert the actual number of unemployed is much larger. GLEE CLUB NEEDS TENORS I I E NEW YORK, Jan. 12.- OP)--The cuss the reports required from fra- New York Post said today that it had ternities under the terms of the Fi- learned that a man bearing a striking nancial Standards and Regulations resemblance to Bruno Hauptmann adopted by the Committee on Student will be a surprise witness for the de- Conduct last fall. fense in the trial of the man charged Mr. Briggs is chairman of the com- with kidnaping the Lindbergh baby. mittee authorized to make exceptions The "double," the Post said, is Rob- to Rule Two of these regulations. The ert Scanlon, of Menlo Park, N. J., who other members being Prof. Leigh J. at the time of the kidnaping was a Young, representing the Executive real estate man and was inspecting a Committee of the Interfraternity piece of property near the Hopewell' Council, and Paul R. Kempf, repre- estate of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh. senting the Fraternity Alumni Asso- Witness Prepared To Testify ciation. This witness, according to the Post, . Dean Bursley stressed the fact that is prepared to testify that he was in it is important that every fraternity the woods surrounding the Lindbergh be represented at the meeting by its home and drove over in that vicinity treasurer, or the officer responsible at about the time of the abduction. for making out the monthly reports. The Post said that Scanlon decided The financial regulations passed to offer his testimony after having this fall require fraternities to turnin read accounts of the trial at Flem- to the Dean of Students (1) a monthly ington, and when he recognized that financial statement, (2) a monthly many of the, episodes described by balance sheet, and (3) and an ac Sourland residents who have testified ceptable audit of the chapter ac- to having seen Hauptmann near the counts at the end of each school year, Lindbergh home had happened to him. each of these reports to be counter- These Sourland residents, who are signed by the Alumni Financial Ad- to be called as witnesses by the prose- v'ser. cuti on, made identifications of Haupt-. mann at his extradition proceedings' LIQUOR PERMITS HALTED in New York. WASHINGTON, Jan. 12-The Fed- Scanlon, the Post said, drove about' eral Alcohol Administration today the Hopewell region in a green sedan, halted liquor rectification permits to which later was painted blue. stop the flood of cheap whiskies. Worse Than Atlantic Trip, She Says; May Fly On To Chicago OAKLAND, Calif., Jan. 12 --(')- Amelia Earhart Putnam, ocean-con- quering aviatrix, flashed into Oakland today to complete the first solo flight ever made between Hawaii and Cali- fornia - and hastily combed her tousled blonde hair before turning to face a madly cheering crowd. "I'm tired," said the famous holder f many aviation records as she pop- ped her head out of the cockpit, saw the crowd and reached for her comb. The wheels of her swift, red mono- plane touched dry land at 1:31 p.m. (4:31 p.m. E.S.T.) just 18 hours and 16 minutes after her exciting take-off from Wheeler Field, 25 miles out of Honolulu. Two hours after landing she went to bed, without benefit of negligee, in an Oakland hotel. Is First Time Not satisfied with two aerial trips across the Atlantic, and a host of other aviation honors, the 36-year- old' flier challenged the Pacific as has no other man or woman. She came through after fighting a variety of weather and giving California watchers an uneasy three hours dur- ing which her position was not known. "It was worse than the Atlantic flights," she said. "There was no purpose or reason for it." Asked about reports that she was considering continuing on to Chica- go or Washington, immediately she smiled mysteriously and said: "Well, I'll have to check the weath- er before hopping, but I won't be go- ing for three or four hours." But Miss Earhart appeared pretty tired and the circumstances discount- ed the idea. Airport attendants said she had left instructions not to re- fuel her plane. Weather conditions to the east were reported unfavor- able. "I had enough fuel in my tanks to have lasted another two hours," Miss Earhart went on, in contrast with the statement of Lieut. Commander Clarence Williams indicating her sup- ply was due to be exhausted about the time she landed. Surprises Crowd For three hours California coastal cities had been awaiting her and when she swooped down on the air- port she took the crowd of 5,000 by surprise. A mighty cheer arose. The crowd surged toward the plane and stopped little short of its whirling propeller blades. "I don't want to sit down," she said firmly when an attendant saw her fatigue and offered her a chair. Attendants pushed her plane into a hangar and closed the doors against the admiring crowd, but only after many had succeeded in grasping her hand and shouting words of praise of her. Someone mentioned that she had not been heard from for a consider- able time before landing; that there were reports she was battling fog, had strayed from her course; that her gasoline was running low before she reached the coast. They asked if she had been worried. "Worried?" she echoed. "Oh, I thought I would like to have the sight of land a couple of times." 'Vital Matters' To Be Studied By Fraternities A meeting of fraternity alumni as- sociation officers, financial advisers, and house presidents, to "discuss mat- ters of vital importance both to the University and the fraternities," will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at the Union. The meeting was called by Presi- dent Alexander G. Ruthven and let- ters have been sent 'out to all indi- viduals concerned inviting them to attend. ThnonC.ar 'jvmd M -1. min;i. A f t t 3 f r E 1 . Survey Reveals Percentage Of Teacher Graduates Employed By MARSHALL D. SHULMAN More than two-thirds of the stu- dents graduating from the University with teacher's certificates in the past two years have experienced periods of employment. Of those who have found employment, an average of only one third have actually found work teach- ing. These were among the conclusions drawn from a survey of recent teach- er-certificated graduates of the Uni- versity by Prof. George E. Myers of the school of education. Approxi- mately 1,000 students were included, covering graduates from 1929, '30, '31, '32, and '33. Other figures revealed that about one fifth of the graduates of the past two years have found no work at all, vvi- mna~nd n mman namnrenre-.. The most common means by far of obtaining a position was reported as personal application, with friends or relatives second, and the Bureau of Appointments third. More than 80 per cent of the 1933 class and about 45 per cent of the class of 1929 -were registered with this Bureau when the study was made. "The recreational life of many indi- viduals who reported is badly unbal- anced," said Professor Myers. "One young woman reported 40 hours per week devoted to bridge, movies and dancing. "As to types of further education desired by this group, naturally pro- fessional work in their own field ranks first. Sociology comes second, with English, commercial training, fine arts. lnanaaes sciences. business a-